Tunisia's coalition 'reaches agreement'
Ennahdha and partners agree in principle to share top three posts, with Hamadi Jbeli as prime minister, reports say.
Tunisia's Islamist Ennahdha party and its two coalition partners have reached agreement in principle to share the top three government posts between them, senior sources from two coalition parties told Reuters news agency.
Under the deal, the most powerful post of prime minister will go to Hamadi Jbeli, secretary-general of the Ennahdha party, which won last month's election, sources said on Friday, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Moncef Marzouki, leader of the secularist Congress for the Republic, a junior coalition partner, is to be named Tunisian president, and Mustafa Ben Jaafar, leader of third coalition partner Ettakatol, will be speaker of the constitutional assembly, the sources said.
The three parties have "an agreement in principle but it is not official yet," said one of the sources. The other source said an announcement would be made in the next few days.
Tunisia became the birth-place of the "Arab Spring" uprisings earlier this year after vegetable seller Mohamed Bouazizi set fire to himself in an act of protest that swelled into a revolution and ousted the president.
In its first democratic election last month, Tunisia handed victory to the moderate Ennahdha party, the first time Islamists had won power in the Arab world since the Hamas faction won an election in the Palestinian Territories in 2006.
Tunisia's transition to democracy is being watched closely by Egypt and Libya, where "Arab Spring" revolts pushed out entrenched leaders and where once-outlawed Islamists are also challenging for power.
Ghannouchi's pledge
Last month's election was for an assembly which will sit for a year to draft a new constitution.
Once that is done, it will be dissolved and new elections will be called for a legislature and possibly a president, depending on what new system of government the assembly chooses.
There is no formal role for Ennahdha leader Rachid Ghannouchi. Some observers say he may have his eye on the president's job when new elections come around.
Ennahda emerged from last month's election as the biggest party but short of a majority in the assembly, forcing it to form a coalition.
Ennahdha coming to power has worried many Tunisian secularists who believe their liberal lifestyles are under threat.
Ghannouchi has offered assurances that he will not impose a Muslim moral code, that he will respect women's rights and not ban the sale of alcohol or try to stop women wearing bikinis on the country's Mediterranean beaches.
Some secularists said Ennahdha's hidden agenda had been unmasked this week when footage emerged of Jbeli at a meeting with supporters invoking a "six caliphate," or pan-Islamic state.
But Ennahdha said their opponents were deliberately distorting Jbeli's words.
Source: Reuters
Comment: It shows again how traitorous and cowards and without backbone these moderate so-called Islamic parties are, when the secularists come to power they tremble over the rights of the believers, they use every power at their disposal to fight Islam and the true believers, they stand behind their wicked convictions and do not compromise, what an opposite when these moderate so-called Islamic parties come to power, they don't even dare to forbid alcohol or bikinis, not even that, they don't even shy proclaiming this themselves and making this pledge.
These can not be called
Islamists, they are a disgrace. What Islam do they proclaim to represent when
they are scared of bikinis. The disposed dictator Ben Ali Said went as far to
use the secret service to hunt dolls that wear Hijab, and that in a Muslim
country.
2:120 And the Jews will not be
pleased with you, nor the Christians until you follow their religion. Say:
Surely Allah's guidance, that is the (true) guidance. And if you follow their
desires after the knowledge that has come to you, you shall have no guardian
from Allah, nor any helper.